One of the photographs I submitted for the 'Home' category of the 'INDIA Future of Change' photographic competition has been shortlisted: 'INDIA Future of Change'.
Showing posts with label Houses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Houses. Show all posts
Friday, 25 March 2011
Shortlisted
One of the photographs I submitted for the 'Home' category of the 'INDIA Future of Change' photographic competition has been shortlisted: 'INDIA Future of Change'.
Labels:
Ahmedabad,
Architecture,
Gujarat,
House decoration,
Houses,
India,
MS:SP Fellowship,
Photography
Saturday, 12 February 2011
India Future of Change
You can see them on the flicker site here: India Future of Change.
Labels:
Ahmedabad,
Architecture,
Gujarat,
Houses,
India,
Kutch,
Landscape,
MS:SP Fellowship,
Old City,
Tribal villages,
Villages
Monday, 20 December 2010
Baasher Ghor - The Bamboo House

Labels:
Bangladesh,
Basketry,
Craft,
House decoration,
Houses,
Nature reserves,
Photography,
Tribal villages
Sunday, 14 March 2010
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Kala Raksha
Labels:
Craft,
Drawing,
Gujarat,
House decoration,
Houses,
India,
Jewellery,
Kutch,
MS:SP Fellowship,
Museum,
Paint,
textiles,
Tribal villages,
Villages
Friday, 12 March 2010
Kutch
Kutch is a region in the north of Gujarat, it is bordered to the north by Pakistan and the northeast by Rajasthan. The area is recognized for its flora, fauna and habitat for migrating birds including the salt marshes which form the 'Rann of Kutch'.

The area is also known for its exquisite handicrafts, especially its diverse styles of embroidery, which vary with the different tribal communities who live in the region.
The area is also known for its exquisite handicrafts, especially its diverse styles of embroidery, which vary with the different tribal communities who live in the region.

It is also a centre for terracotta, wood and metal crafts (jewellery, engraving and bell-making), tie-dyeing, block-printing and hand-painting.
Many of the groups and communities who inhabit the Kutch district have their origins in neighbouring regions including Rajasthan, Sindh and Afghanistan, arriving here through centuries of migration or forced displacement. 


Both the mud and the concrete houses are often decorated.



Some have cupboards and shelves embellished with painted clay and mirror work.


I liked the use of the lightbulbs.




The nose jewellery this woman wears is similar in design to the earpieces of the Rabari men.
It seems almost every where you look there is all manner of methods of making beauty, making marks that enhance, individualise and identify.
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